Bilateral investment treaties and sovereign default risk: Evidence for emerging markets

Stefan Eichler, Jannik André Nauerth
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Abstract

This paper analyses the impact of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) on sovereign default risk using monthly data for 29 emerging markets from 1996 to 2016. Under a BIT, foreign investors can use an international arbitration scheme to enforce compensation claims against the host country's government. We focus on the so far unexplored legal risk associated with BITs since a higher likelihood of government expropriations implicitly increases public debt. We do not find a significant unconditional effect of BITs on sovereign default risk (measured by the month‐over‐month percentage change in a country's Emerging Market Bond Index). Considering the heterogeneity of BITs and political risk, we find robust and strong negative effects of BITs on sovereign bond returns. In countries with high political risk of expropriation (measured by low executive constraints), we find that the implementation of BITs with strong investor protection is associated with a significantly negative impact on sovereign bond returns (−0.45 percentage points), which compares to roughly 11.7% of bond returns' monthly standard deviation.
双边投资条约与主权违约风险:新兴市场的证据
本文利用 1996 年至 2016 年 29 个新兴市场的月度数据,分析了双边投资条约(BIT)对主权违约风险的影响。根据双边投资协定,外国投资者可以利用国际仲裁机制来执行对东道国政府的赔偿要求。由于政府征用的可能性越高,公共债务就会隐性增加,因此我们重点关注与双边投资协定相关的、迄今为止尚未探索的法律风险。我们没有发现双边投资协定对主权违约风险(以一国新兴市场债券指数的月度百分比变化来衡量)有明显的无条件影响。考虑到双边投资协定和政治风险的异质性,我们发现双边投资协定对主权债券收益有稳健而强烈的负面影响。在征用政治风险较高的国家(以行政约束较低衡量),我们发现实施具有较强投资者保护的双边投资协定会对主权债券收益率产生显著的负面影响(-0.45 个百分点),相当于债券收益率月度标准差的约 11.7%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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